Category Archives: Fabric Art

Art primarily using fabric as its basis.

Local Art, Open Call Art Exhibit at Highwire Gallery

Pinheads, Tara Vargas, mixed media quilt, Local Art, Open Call Art Exhibit at Highwire Gallery Pinhead(s), Tara Vargas, mixed media quilt, Local Art, Open Call Art Exhibit at Highwire Gallery, 2040 Frankford Avenue. Tara Vargas‘ quilt, Pinhead(s), takes an old fashioned task and injects punk. An homage to The Ramones, the quilt has zippers, ripped denim, duct tape border and portraits of the band. DoN was transfixed by the time trip aspect of the piece mixing the Victorian era with Seventies squalor in a 21st Century artwork. The effect is sublime combining metaphors for youthful anarchy with artful utilitarianism, it’s extraordinary. Read more about Local Art at the new www.DoNArTNeWs.com Philadelphia Art News Blog

Written and photographed by DoN Brewer except where noted.

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Atmospheric at Main Line Art Center

Delainey Barclay, Atmospheric at Main Line Art Center

Delainey Barclay, Atmospheric at Main Line Art Center 

Atmospheric, curated by Executive Director Amie Potsic, at  Main Line Art Center features the artwork of three InLiquid member artists: Delainey BarclayDianna Koppisch Hricko and Maureen Ciaccio. The 75 year old gallery space is activated throughout with an installation of artwork using information sources in new ways that will expand how you think about the everyday texts we use in our lives.

Read DoN Brewer‘s review at the new DoNArTNeWs Philadelphia Art News Blog.

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Mae Downs & Co. Shoppe Grand Opening

Mae Downs & Co. Grand Opening, fine home decor, interior design, antiques and vintage

Mae Downs & Co. Shoppe Grand Opening, fine home decor, interior design, antiques and vintage.

Mae Downs & Co. has been operating out of the artist studio building 1241 Carpenter Street for years but now they have taken the leap to opening a lovely shop at 1118 Pine Street in Philadelphia. The studio shared by Brian Campbell, the dish and pottery collector/connoisseur and Kevin McLaughlin, the fabulously creative fabric artist was inviting and inspiring but hard to find in the maze of studios.

Now, with a simply gorgeous storefront window decorated with vintage pottery such as Clarise Cliff pots and Kevin McLaughlin‘s own aspirational handmade pillows, the duo have staked a claim for elegant home decor among the galleries, restaurants and antique stores along Pine Street.

Mae Downs & Co. Grand Opening, fine home decor, interior design, antiques and vintage

Mae Downs & Co. Shoppe 1118 Pine Street, Philadelphia, PA 19107

Quirky yet homey the collection of elegant china, fun vintage finds and handmade pillows and sachets creates an aura of fine living Philadelphians have longed for after existing too long with Swedish flat-packed furniture. The collection isn’t old fashioned at all with a mix of mid-century modern, art deco and 21st century craft proving good design is timeless and desirable.

Mae Downs & Co. Grand Opening, fine home decor, interior design, antiques and vintage

Mae Downs & Co. Shoppe

Kevin McLaughlin‘s handmade strawberry shaped sachets are made with vintage fabrics and stuffed with luscious lavender. Each piece is unique and have even been sold at The Philadelphia Museum of Art gift shop. When DoN visited the workshop during a Philadelphia Open Studio Tour a few years back, Kevin chatted while not missing a stitch as he assembled each berry from fine flannels, linens, wools and re-cycled knits. The sachets are so popular that design maven Brini Maxwell even featured the fine sachets on her popular webpage and YouTube channel.

Mae Downs & Co. Grand Opening, fine home decor, interior design, antiques and vintage

Mae Downs & Co. Shoppe

Each of these gorgeous pillows are handmade by Mae Downs & Co. Shoppe proprietor Kevin McLaughlin and are affordably priced in the low three figure range. Considering the time and effort lovingly put into each piece, these pillows will need to be re-stocked as Philadelphians discover the beauty of these fine American made products.

Mae Downs & Co. Grand Opening, fine home decor, interior design, antiques and vintage

Mae Downs & Co. Shoppe

DoN had the opportunity to chat with shop co-proprietor Brian Campbell and asked about the challenges of opening a small business in these harsh financial times? “Well, the economy has certainly been a challenge. I started by collecting pottery and turned to china, and I started collecting obsessively. And then I found I had too much stuff so I started selling it on ebay and then opened the studio to keep it all and sell. I share the studio with Kevin McLaughlin of Mae Downs and Co., so we had his shop and my storage and we would have open houses but it wasn’t a retail space with little foot traffic.”

Mae Downs & Co. Grand Opening, fine home decor, interior design, antiques and vintage

Mae Downs & Co. Shoppe

Brian Campbell explained, “We wanted a place where people could come and get to us easily. And we found it. ebay worked out when I first started doing it but after America tanked after 2007, sales started going down. The last year or two it’s been on the rise again, there’s definitely, um, people are paying more for things. So, that was kind of a clue that maybe it was time to start thinking of opening a shop. Whenever I go to a shop I ask them, ‘How’s business?’, because in the back of my mind I was always thinking about opening a shop.”

“As I started getting better reports from small shop owners, I thought, ‘OK, maybe it’s time?’, and this kind of fell into our lap. We saw it in the City Paper and we met with the realtor. I stopped in early on my way to work, I have a job at The Mural Arts Program, and we loved it so we applied and they loved what we do and felt really good about what we were doing. And that it would be a good fit for the street. The timing couldn’t have been more perfect, we found the space in August, we took the lease beginning September 1st. All we really had to do was paint the floor and then move stuff in, we still have some work we want to do but we want it to be open so people can walk around and not feel like they’re in a museum.”

Mae Downs & Co. Grand Opening, fine home decor, interior design, antiques and vintage

Mae Downs & Co. Shoppe

“I was trying to describe to someone what the feeling was like and the line came up, “Where Sister Parish meets Dorothy Draper“, said Brian Campbell before he was drawn back into the shop to answer questions about the eclectic merchandise by excited shoppers.

Written and Photographed by DoN Brewer

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Endangered Seasons, Amie Potsic at The Borowsky Gallery

Endangered Seasons, Amie Potsic at The Borowsky Gallery

Endangered SeasonsAmie Potsic at The Borowsky Gallery

Turn Here: ARTISTS PROMOTING ENVIRONMENTAL AWARENESS is an installation of photography at The Borowsky Gallery in the Gershman Y at the corner of Pine Street and Avenue of the Arts focussing attention on the world’s disintegration of the familiar. Amie Potsic installed more than fifty yards of draped multi-colored silk printed with her signature tree photographs. Using trees as a metaphor of our connection to the earth, Amie expands the dialog from landscape photography to multimedia installation, the translucent silk, rich with color and detail, creating memes of a global scale. 

Endangered Seasons, Amie Potsic at The Borowsky Gallery

Endangered SeasonsAmie Potsic at The Borowsky Gallery

Even though Amie Potsic shoots most of her photographs in Philadelphia, the sense of orientalism pervades the images with Asian references co-opted for the effect of a global view. The silk was printed in Pennsylvania. The layers of fabric play off each other like splashes of paint in bursts of expressionism yet there is a conservatism to the presentation which triggers ideas.  Like: that would make a great shirt, that would look fabulous in my dining room, scarves, of course, and furniture.  The trees symbolize community, work, aspirations, beauty and the fabric represents production, utilitarianism and use of resources.

Endangered Seasons, Amie Potsic at The Borowsky Gallery

Endangered SeasonsAmie Potsic at The Borowsky Gallery

Endangered Seasons was previously exhibited in Greece, imagine the lustrous silk in the Mediterranean light, offering an even broader global provenance to the piece. Like branches of thought the artwork spirals like a fractal, the closer you look the more it changes, patterns of connection and disconnection guiding the viewer gently into a deeper state of understanding. Rooted in the concern for a planetary phenomenon that is sure to affect her family, Amie Potsic creates photographs that resonate on multiple levels of consciousness and awareness, subtly traditional yet leaving the viewer with questions of sustainability, containment and collaboration on a massively global scale.

Endangered Seasons, Amie Potsic at The Borowsky Gallery

Endangered SeasonsAmie Potsic at The Borowsky Gallery

Read more about Turn Here: ARTISTS PROMOTING ENVIRONMENTAL AWARENESS at SideArts.com Philadelphia Art Blog, Cassandra Alyse Hoo‘s post Turn Here” Is A Moving Environmental Exhibit at The Gershman Y’s Borowsky Gallery comprehensively approaches the theme of environmental change devastatingly portrayed in this important art show.

Amie Potsic is now Executive Director of Main Line Arts Center. Congratulations on this deserved opportunity. Thank you for your guidance and encouragement for my art career and writing. Let’s make some art news.

Main Line Media News coverage.

Written and Photographed by DoN Brewer

Through SideArts.comDoN is offering online and in-person one-on-one consulting services to visual and craft artists and art businesses.  Read all about it here.

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Hayley Tomlinson, Moore College of Art and Design Senior Exhibit 2012

Hayley Tomlinson, Moore College of Art and Design Senior Exhibit 2012

Hayley TomlinsonMoore College of Art & Design Senior Exhibit 2012

Hayley Tomlinson, Moore College of Art & Design Senior Exhibit 2012

Artist, Hayley Tomlinson‘s installation at the Galleries at Moore for the Senior Show was grand in every way from concept to execution to presentation.  The artist made a splash with her needle point award ribbons in the Philadelphia art blogs last year, her use of an old fashioned technology like crochet or needlepoint mashed into modern social networking is an on point comment on how information spreads.  The information stored in knitting is powerful; fabric is a metaphor for storing information.  Scan the QRCode in one of her fabric iPads and it will take you to her website.  Hayley Tomlinson‘s senior thesis from Moore College of Art & Design, her degree is 3D Fine Arts, also takes on the fame side of art with an homage to Jeff Koons and the information stored in balloon dogs.

“My paper is about artists that I envy and who I want to be like one day.  But, I’m also kind of  jealous because of the money that they have and I really want to be rich and famous.”

Hayley Tomlinson, Moore College of Art and Design Senior Exhibit 2012

Hayley TomlinsonMoore College of Art & Design Senior Exhibit 2012

Hayley Tomlinson graduated magna cum laude and already has a job as a graphic designer in Philadelphia.  She told DoN, “Now that I have this full time job I can find a way to support my separate art career. So, I guess we’ll see, I’m moving to a new place, starting a new job, I need to organize myself and figure out what I want to make.  I won the Blick Art Award so I want to go to Blick Art Materials and buy a lot of markers and paper and draw things and see where that takes me.”

Hayley Tomlinson, Moore College of Art and Design Senior Exhibit 2012

Hayley TomlinsonMoore College of Art & Design Senior Exhibit 2012

Hayley Tomlinson, Moore College of Art and Design Senior Exhibit 2012

Hayley Tomlinson, Moore College of Art and Design Senior Exhibit 2012

Hayley TomlinsonMoore College of Art & Design Senior Exhibit 2012

“I made the bunny as the poor man’s Jeff Koons, it’s stuffed and I made it myself and I can’t pay other people to make it for me.  So it’s stuff that’s very soft, I put it on cement blocks because I can’t have a concrete pedestal like Jeff Koons can.  The iPads I made are also about envy, it’s more focussed on things I have a love/hate relationship with and that like, ‘I hate myself for loving these things’.  So, I’m going to keep working with those ideas that I make.”

“I’ve got a degree, I’ve got a job, I’ve got ideas in my head, so, it will be good.”

Read more about Hayley Tomlinson:

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Written & photographed by DoN 

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